HONOLULU HIGH CAPACITY TRANSIT CORRIDOR PROJECT SURVEYED PROPERTY CONSIDERED ELIGIBLE FOR NATIONAL REGISTER TMK: None

Historic Status: Evaluated Eligible Portion of Alignment: Koko Head portion

Resource Name/Historic Name: Kapalama Canal Bridge Sector: 21 Kapalama Station Sector Location: Dillingham Blvd Owner: City and County of Station Block: Date-Original: 1930 Source: Inscription on bridge & Thompson, Bethany, Historic Bridge Inventory, Island of , 1980. Present Use/Historic Use: Bridge

Architectural Description: Integrity:

This bridge is a five-span, reinforced-concrete, tee-beam deck- Integrity appears high, parapets and stanchions are unaltered. girder bridge, about 113' in length. It was built for the City & County of Honolulu, under the tenure of Bureau Engineer D. Balch and design engineer George Dawson. Its concete parapets are pierced to form balustrades with arched-topped vertically oriented openings. This arched-top design pattern for balustrades was a standardized pattern of Territorial Highway Department bridges of this period. The balustrades of this bridge are divided by four regularly spaced stanchions that have thick rectangular tops with a very-low-slope hipped cap. The face of each stanchion has a recessed rectangular panel with a raised pyramidal design. The end stanchions are similar but slightly larger with flat panels that are inscribed "Kapalama Canal" and on the opposite stanchion, "1930." There are 10' sidewalks on both sides of the bridge.

Significance:

Criterion "A" - for its association with the the transportation history of the area and the extension of Dillingham Boulevard from the Kai neighborhood to downtown. Criterion "C" - as an example of concrete bridge engineering and design in . This bridge was an important transportation link between Kalihi and downtown Honolulu and an important aspect of the construction of Dillingham Boulevard between Waiakamilo and King Street in the early 1930s.

Prepared by Mason Architects July 2008